A comic drama about philosophy, family, religion,
and, of course, professional wrestling.
Barely adequate philosophy professor Legare Hume has a mind-body problem. No matter how far he goes, no matter how hard he thinks, he can’t escape the world he lives in.
Hume’s Fork is a brilliantly satirical and philosophical novel, every bit as funny as it is intelligent—a true original.

Award-winning author Melissa Yuan-Innes gathers three of her most disquieting tales, "Skin Song," "The Dormitory of the Friable Little Girls," and "Mrs. Marigold's House" for your reading (dis)pleasure.
From a medical student rightfully afraid of dissecting a cadaver to sadistic nuns and vampire schoolgirls, come in and open this little box of horror.

"[A] medical student who is anything but ordinary...
Kyla has a strange gift: she can hear skin songs. To her, a person's skin has a song and each person sounds differently. On arriving at med school she finds herself in a quandary: does the skin song continue after death?
Mixing mystery in with sheer humanity and splendid characterization, Yuan-Innes's story is a delight."
-Alicia Curtis

Imagine this: It's New Year's Eve and you're at a party, in a ballroom, standing beneath a crystal chandelier. On each piece of cut crystal you see an image of someone else's New Year's Eve. Dawn DeAnna Wilson shines a light through that chandelier, illustrating a simple yet powerful truth: we are all connected.

The Kiki dwell contentedly in their hive until the odd roundy beasts plummet to the surface.
Chantelle and James, marooned on an alien world of banded stone and gaping chasms, take refuge in the warrens of the roach-like denizens of the planet. They find a peaceful, if uneasy, co-existence.
Until the baby arrives.
And they call again for help.
And Chantelle must choose: her baby or her life.

The study, control, and understanding of schizophrenia has been hampered by lack of information, inappropriate tools (like no computers of sufficient complexity for handling of compilation and dissemination of data), obviously a lack of appropriate software for such research and perhaps most simply, the incorrect approach.
Also included in my 99 cent ebook.

Opal Irene Whiteley was born in 1897 in Washington and was raised in Oregon, and died at the Napsbury Hospital in England as a psychiatric patient, at the age of ninety-four in 1992. How did a brilliant young American girl with a passion for geology and nature study come to end her life institutionalized in England?

Opal Whiteley (1897-1992) remains a mysterious figure. Her life began as a brilliant girl with a passion for nature living in logging camps in Oregon, and ended as a psychiatric patient in the Napsbury Hospital in England after decades of institutionalization. How did this happen? Can the riddle of multi-synaesthete Whiteley be solved by comparing her life with other famous and enigmatic people?

Strange events surround Constance.
She sees shadows and gains time.
Key moments in her life become entangled with bizarre distant worlds.
As you enter the reality of Constance normal events take on deeper meanings.
Alien abduction, near death experiences, drug induced hallucinations and terminal illness, all become gateways to a distant world.